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GIS Best Practices Enterprise GIS

January 2007 Table of Contents

What Is GIS? 1

Enterprise GIS 3

Evaluating Enterprise GIS Requirements 5

Commonwealth of Kentucky's Enterprise Implementation 13

Kick-Starting Enterprise GIS 19

Somerset County, New Jersey, Developing a County 25 Enterprise GIS

West Springfi eld, Massachusetts, Builds Information Portals 29 with GIS

Aalborg, Denmark, Consolidates All Its Municipal Utility 33 Companies Through GIS

Southern Company's Enterprise GIS Streamlines Communication 41 Between Its Five Electric Utilities

Saudi Arabian Oil Company Explores the Advantages of 49 Enterprise GIS

i What Is GIS?

Making decisions based on geography is basic to human thinking. Where shall we go, what will it be like, and what shall we do when we get there are applied to the simple event of going to the store or to the major event of launching a bathysphere into the ocean's depths. By understanding geography and people's relationship to location, we can make informed decisions about the way we live on our planet. A geographic information system (GIS) is a technological tool for comprehending geography and making intelligent decisions.

GIS organizes geographic data so that a person reading a map can select data necessary for a specifi c project or task. A thematic map has a table of contents that allows the reader to add layers of information to a basemap of real-world locations. For example, a social analyst might use the basemap of Eugene, Oregon, and select datasets from the U.S. Census Bureau to add data layers to a map that shows residents' education levels, ages, and employment status. With an ability to combine a variety of datasets in an infi nite number of ways, GIS is a useful tool for nearly every fi eld of knowledge from archaeology to zoology.

A good GIS program is able to process geographic data from a variety of sources and integrate it into a map project. Many countries have an abundance of geographic data for analysis, and governments often make GIS datasets publicly available. Map fi le databases often come included with GIS packages; others can be obtained from both commercial vendors and government agencies. Some data is gathered in the fi eld by global positioning units that attach a location coordinate (latitude and longitude) to a feature such as a pump station.

GIS maps are interactive. On the computer screen, map users can scan a GIS map in any direction, zoom in or out, and change the nature of the information contained in the map. They can choose whether to see the roads, how many roads to see, and how roads should be depicted. Then they can select what other items they wish to view alongside these roads such as storm drains, gas lines, rare plants, or hospitals. Some GIS programs are designed to perform sophisticated calculations for tracking storms or predicting erosion patterns. GIS applications can be embedded into common activities such as verifying an address.

From routinely performing work-related tasks to scientifi cally exploring the complexities of our world, GIS gives people the geographic advantage to become more productive, more aware, and more responsive citizens of planet Earth.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 1 WWW.ESRI.COM Enterprise GIS

GIS is taking industries by storm and is poised to transform them. For too long, many enterprises have been data rich but information poor. Now, through advances in GIS and other technology areas, this era is ending. In its place we see the emergence of GIS as a solution to providing meaningful business intelligence to management and accurate product and marketing information to clients and customers. GIS technology is fast becoming one of the linchpins of an enterprise's command center.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 3 WWW.ESRI.COM Evaluating Enterprise GIS Requirements By Scott Bowman, City of Fresno,

Editor's note: Once the decision has been made to implement an enterprise GIS, a steering committee that includes stakeholders should be established to guide the needs assessment process. This assessment should evaluate existing GIS datasets and GIS resources, see where redundancy can be eliminated, consider the creation of GIS-based data service levels and implementation of GIS standards, and take advantage of the GIS software to deliver an enterprise-level database supporting agency needs. These suggestions will help make the assessment process thorough and effi cient.

A complete review of all potential GIS resources should be performed.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 5 WWW.ESRI.COM Evaluating Existing GIS Evaluating existing datasets is the fi rst step in bringing the enterprise approach to the Datasets decentralized participants. Reviewing all native GIS layers, GIS-enabled spatial databases, associated location-based databases, and other enterprise databases is essential to learn the true status of the data. Some agencies may have extensive data redundancies that can be eliminated or integrated through GIS.

The criteria for evaluating the existing GIS data should include foundational requirements, intradepartmental requirements, and strictly departmental requirements. Data layers that fulfi ll foundation requirements are the key data layers—this is the data required by all participating departments and divisions in the enterprise. The intradepartmental requirement layer is data that is used by more than one department or division. Departmental data only serves a single department's needs. After data layers have been graded, they should be further reviewed for

„ Completeness in coverage and scope

„ Detail of information contained within

„ Spatial accuracy and precision of the data

„ Accuracy of the information contained

„ Precision

„ Spatial integrity

„ Applicability for the enterprise

There is a danger in blindly trusting that the existing GIS data layers are adequate for the implementation in an enterprise GIS. Because these layers were created for a particular purpose, their accuracy or detail may not be suffi cient for other users and applications. Therefore, it is always a good practice to review the existing data prior to applying it to the enterprise. However, this review should also take into account that the goal is to get reasonably good data out to the enterprise. This may be accomplished by setting limits for compliance. For example, 80 percent compliance with an accuracy requirement gets data to users but still identifi es it for further review so its accuracy can be improved. The data should be cataloged and graded as part of the evaluation so the data can be prioritized for enterprise readiness, update, or elimination.

FEBRUARY 2007 6 ENTERPRISE GIS Evaluating GIS A complete review of all potential GIS resources should be performed. This review should Resources include all other nontypical GIS-related resources such as (but not limited to) „ Personnel

„ Hardware

„ GIS software systems

„ Existing tabular and non-GIS databases

„ CAD data

„ Hard-copy maps or atlases

Evaluating personnel should include skills, abilities, educational attainment, and (most important) experience with GIS, databases, and information systems of the current staff to see how these resources align with the goals of an enterprise GIS. A review of existing and potential job descriptions, new positions (such as a GIS administrator/coordinator), and the training requirements for the potential implementation should also be included.

The existing network, servers, tabular and relational databases, asset inventories, non-GIS information, and GIS-related software technologies should be identifi ed and evaluated for potential application for an enterprise GIS. This review should answer some the following types of questions:

„ Is there a need for a centralized repository for enterprise data?

„ Is there a central point available to the enterprise for serving data and data storage?

„ Is the system, both network and hardware, adequate to support enterprise GIS data traffi c?

„ Is the current software suffi ciently robust for the enterprise?

The same criteria for evaluating the GIS data—foundational, intradepartmental, and departmental—should be applied to existing tabular and non-GIS databases. External traditional tabular and non-GIS databases should also be included in the evaluation for potential enterprise applications for interdepartmental data sharing through the GIS. The evaluation should also include a review of hard-copy, static, historical, and CAD atlases and maps to ensure that all data is reviewed for potential application to the enterprise GIS.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 7 WWW.ESRI.COM Eliminating An investigation into enterprise GIS will most likely fi nd multiple redundancies in data storage, Redundancies data maintenance, and other areas that exist in the current environment. These redundancies should be graded as data that is necessary and required, data that is not necessary, and data that can potentially be eliminated.

When evaluating GIS resources, look for completeness, detail, spatial accuracy, precision, spatial integrity, and applicability.

However, some redundant data may have to persist. Redundancies in public safety information systems, for example, may be required by local, state, or federal statutes. Lack of integrated information systems within the agency may prevent elimination of some redundancies. Required redundancies should not be viewed as an impediment for the implementation of enterprise GIS. They should be noted and implementation plans modifi ed to include the dissemination of data into these redundant systems, databases, and applications.

FEBRUARY 2007 8 ENTERPRISE GIS Where possible, all other redundancies should be eliminated to increase the enterprise focus and the centralized administration of data. Representatives of participating departments should share their data requirements and data maps so the impact of redundancy elimination on work plans, procedures, and systems can be assessed.

Create GIS-Based Data As part of developing enterprise GIS, departmental requirements for providing data or products Service Levels may differ in terms of accuracy, precision, layers, and timelines, which may impact other departments. There is a need to develop a method for tracking and defi ning these requirements and impacts as part of the enterprise GIS to ensure that all parties involved are working together.

To satisfy this need, the enterprise GIS and participating departments should create a rules-based service-level agreement that defi nes the entity relationship of each particular service, personnel responsibilities, departmental responsibilities, signatures, legal implications, and the priority of critical path single and multithreaded relationships.

A multithreaded relationship is a particular entity that starts in more than one place and must await approvals from multiple departments before progressing as a single entity. The relationship between departments and divisions must be defi ned with applicable working time periods, reasonable lag time, approval triggers, required waiting periods, and all other impeding factors to the automated processing of an activity.

GIS-based data service levels may be formal or informal agreements between departments, divisions, or external agencies such that the enterprise GIS is the application system that holds the process together. These agreements can be used for maintenance, production, application development, data sharing, and other areas where the collaboration of one or more departments or intergovernmental agreements is part of the critical path for the data and products administered as part of the enterprise GIS.

Implementing GIS Crucial to sharing data is data standards. This is central to the success of any information Standards system implementation. It is highly recommended that the Federal Geographic Data Committee (fgdc.er.usgs.gov/index.html) and National Map Accuracy Standards (rmmcweb.cr.usgs.gov/

GIS BEST PRACTICES 9 WWW.ESRI.COM nmpstds/nmas.html) be used as guidelines for standardizing data and developing approaches to managing GIS data layers.

Other good sources for standards are the state Geographic Data Committee, a similar agency charged with standards development, or a regional group involved in data sharing. In the case of bistate, multistate, or multinational implementations, national standards may be more applicable for enabling data sharing.

Whether a specifi c program of GIS standards methodology is used as a standard for all data, data accuracy and precision should be set for the enterprise. This should take into account database formats that must be applied to the GIS for compliance and use within the enterprise. These standards are applied as part of the enterprise implementation in addition to the GIS-based data service levels.

Taking Advantage of Within the GIS industry there is a trend to build a Mercedes-quality enterprise GIS with features GIS Software that are impressive and extensive. If decision makers fail to realize that the immediate benefi ts won't match investment, this trend can be a limiting factor. GIS software vendors, such as ESRI, have developed advanced enterprise GIS database engines and software applications that can leverage information and integrate systems throughout the entire enterprise for local governments. This approach for those smaller agencies that are beginning to move from the decentralized departmental GIS may be much more than they can realistically handle.

The caveat that should be employed here is to take advantage of the software to bring enterprise-like solutions to the users that will build core user group support for further expansion. This expansion leads directly to the implementation of ArcSDE and geodatabase modeling concepts. ArcGIS includes tools and extensions that can be used to bring quick results to users.

An example of this type of deployment is the use of ArcGIS ArcView 9 with ArcGIS Publisher to bring targeted mapping to users that is interactive, allows for data inquiries and limited searches, and answers a specifi c enterprise GIS need. This approach relies on existing personnel making a modest time investment testing this approach. Another requirement is a need for exploiting existing GIS information and related databases. By taking advantage of the immediate cost savings and ROI using the ArcGIS Publisher/ArcReader approach, the agency can bring the advantages of enterprise GIS to users earlier than the Cadillac approach.

FEBRUARY 2007 10 ENTERPRISE GIS After completing this evaluation, the committee should then compile and document the fi ndings, gap analysis, and needs analysis and report them back to the executive-level group. This is the fi rst step in planning for enterprise GIS. The costs are minimal if the agency completes the process without the assistance of a consultant.

However, it should be noted that the costs for this type of service from a consultant are normally much less than the investment in hardware, software, databases, applications, and data development, which make up a much larger portion of the overall costs of enterprise GIS. In addition to keeping staff time to a minimum, the consultant may be able to provide comparisons to other similar agencies, systems analyses, and employ industry experience from previous evaluations to guide this process.

Other keys to a successful evaluation are

„ Communicating with all participants and the executive group „ Keeping the project on a reasonable timeline „ Evaluating the entire enterprise rather a small part „ Reviewing interagency and regional data sharing potential

(Reprinted from the January–March 2005 issue of ArcUser magazine)

GIS BEST PRACTICES 11 WWW.ESRI.COM Commonwealth of Kentucky's Enterprise Implementation GIS as a Utility

By Kent Anness, Kimberly Anness, and Gary R. Harp

Kentucky has now moved GIS into the enterprise, is rapidly expanding its application, and has made access to data resources nearly "plug and play." Visit kygeonet.ky.gov to explore the Commonwealth!

For years, Kentucky has been described as one of the best mapped states in the United States. In the past two decades, major efforts have been made to compile this "mapping," using state-of-the-art GIS technologies. The early successes of the Kentucky Natural Resources and

GIS BEST PRACTICES 13 WWW.ESRI.COM Environmental Protection Cabinet, the Louisville/Jefferson County Information Consortium, and Northern Kentucky's GIS have demonstrated the value of leveraging quality geospatial data within all levels of government; the private sector; and, of course, the citizenry of the Commonwealth.

Kentucky was one of the fi rst states to have an offi ce dedicated to GIS, put GIS data on the Internet for free download, and have a fully functional statewide Geography Network (ArcIMS metadata services) loaded with valuable geospatial resources. Building on the successful results of these efforts, Kentucky has now moved GIS into the enterprise, is rapidly expanding its application, and has made access to data resources nearly "plug-and-play" for all ArcGIS Desktop (ArcView, ArcEditor, and ArcInfo) users.

The Challenge Data sharing and collaboration have been the key to many successful GIS implementations within Kentucky state government, as well as at the regional and local levels. Responsible data stewards have diligently built and maintained their geospatial resources and have shared them accordingly with entities that can benefi t from their use. These data stewards became "publishers" that contribute to the Kentucky Geography Network (KYGEONET). The challenge at hand then was to assemble these distributed resources along with all associated metadata to create the Geospatial Data Clearinghouse that had been envisioned by so many leaders in the Commonwealth's GIS community.

The Solution The success and ever-increasing usage of KYGEONET (kygeonet.ky.gov) since its inception in 2002 have been recognized around the world. However, until early 2005, all the KYGEONET resources were still distributed across many data stewards with master datasets held within that entity. Today, the resources are still distributed, but they are also consolidated at one point within the enterprise.

Late in 2004, Governor Ernie Fletcher's administration saw the need to move many of the Commonwealth's IT functions into its world-class Cold Harbor Computing Center and to create a "center of GIS expertise" that could be leveraged by all state agencies, regional entities, and local government. Under the leadership of Commissioner Mike Inman and Director Gary R. Harp, the Division of Geographic Information (DGI) began implementation of its newly drafted strategic plan. This plan outlined a strategy to offer "GIS as a utility" within state government

FEBRUARY 2007 14 ENTERPRISE GIS and eventually to the private sector and the general public. Up until that time, the Offi ce of Geographic Information (now DGI) had simply served in an enabling role but never had the resources to implement or create specifi c deliverables for the GIS community. But, with the vision of its leadership and an infusion of new and capable staffi ng (Kent and Kimberly Anness), DGI began the implementation of a new repository for all geospatial data resources. This repository, built using ArcSDE 9.x, has become known as KyVector and KyRaster. These dedicated services are now the cornerstone of GIS in the Commonwealth.

More than a dozen statewide raster layers exist within KyRaster; three sets are regional homeland security imagery for Lexington, Louisville, and the Northern Kentucky-Cincinnati area. Statewide color orthoimagery from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency, is forthcoming and will be the next raster layer available to ArcGIS Desktop users and all services.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 15 WWW.ESRI.COM According to Kimberly Anness, creator of KyVector, there are nearly 125 layers available with an additional 25 layers that are considered "secure." Many more layers are slated to be incorporated throughout the year. As with KyRaster, KyVector feeds the Commonwealth's Web mapping services and provides layer-level access to ArcGIS Desktop users on the wide area network (WAN).

This true enterprise implementation will allow some agencies that are just getting into GIS to enter this exciting fi eld without having to buy a server to store needed base data. Thus, it is driving down the cost of getting into GIS at the ground level. Additionally, in the past, it was very common for most GIS workstations in state government to have a secondary hard drive (more than 36 GB) that held all fi le-based orthoimagery and topographic maps. Users are now indicating that their direct access to KyRaster provides them with imagery on the desktop at speeds as fast as they experienced with imagery on their local hard drives.

Additional replicated instances of KyVector and KyRaster are being created at the Kentucky National Guard's Emergency Operations Center in Frankfort, Kentucky. An older instance of KyRaster used by the Kentucky Geological Survey (and housed at the University of Kentucky's McVey Hall Computing Center) will be updated to the current version of KyRaster and KyVector in the coming months.

"KyRaster and KyVector continue to provide the foundation for Internet map services across Kentucky," says Dan Carey, Kentucky Geological Survey. "Thanks to these services, the Kentucky Geological Survey was able to set up Internet map services—in a matter of hours—to serve oil and gas, water well, and coal information. We continue to rely on them for a variety of broad GIS applications."

Results As of April 2005, the KyRaster and KyVector services were complete and stood in mirrored ArcSDE instances at the Cold Harbor Computing Facility. The instances were mirrored to separate traffi c and reduce contention for the geospatial data resources. One instance is dedicated to supporting Kentucky's more than 40 Internet map server sites, its connection to United States Geological Survey's The National Map, the Geospatial One-Stop, and the newly created Kentucky Event Mapping and Analysis Portal (KEMAP). The secure KEMAP service was created for Kentucky Homeland Security, the National Guard, Kentucky State Police, Emergency Management, and other entities that have a true need for access to such information.

FEBRUARY 2007 16 ENTERPRISE GIS The other ArcSDE instance is dedicated to providing GIS users on the Commonwealth's WAN with direct access to all geospatial data resources that are available through KYGEONET. Much has been learned in the testing and implementation of this service, and it is quite apparent that Kentucky's ArcSDE instances, coupled with the state's high-performance WAN, are the new and proven methodology for effi ciently delivering GIS data to users while simultaneously reducing data redundancy. Individual databases are being created for each data steward (KYGEONET Publisher) allowing them to securely connect to their workspace and consistently provide updates as new data is generated. These updates are then rolled into the master ArcSDE instance so all users have immediate access to the most current information.

Formal announcement and rollout of these services were carried out during the April 2005 meeting of the ESRI Kentucky Users Group. Nearly 100 attendees were given an overview of the services along with a demonstration of how the services could be leveraged using

GIS BEST PRACTICES 17 WWW.ESRI.COM ESRI client software packages, such as ArcExplorer and ArcGIS Desktop. The response and feedback have been overwhelmingly positive. There are obviously plans for expansion of the services with more layers and provision of these services to local and regional units of government and, subsequently, the private sector. All of this will be carried out "via the network" and will be bolstered by Governor Fletcher's initiative to saturate the Commonwealth with broadband connectivity by the year 2007.

(Reprinted from the Summer 2005 issue of ArcNews magazine)

FEBRUARY 2007 18 ENTERPRISE GIS Kick-Starting Enterprise GIS In India, a 10,000-Acre Planned Community Is Becoming a Reality

A macromedia Flash-based GIS viewer for customers and departments that need only basic viewing ability.

Lavasa Corporation Limited was formed to undertake a large-scale lifestyle development in India. Based on new urbanism principles, and located near Pune, India, a township is being developed over a sprawling area of approximately 10,000 rolling acres. Lavasa is located on

GIS BEST PRACTICES 19 WWW.ESRI.COM the backwaters of Warasgaon dam on the Western Ghats between Pune and Mumbai. The township is master planned with the objective of striking a balance between cosmopolitan architecture and environmentally friendly surroundings. With proximity of 90 minutes to Pune and 4 hours to Mumbai, Lavasa presents an attractive holiday location for urbanites. Tropical Lavasa has three main seasons: summer (March to May), monsoon (June to September), and winter (October to February).

The master plan for the Lavasa Project calls for a modern "hill town" in harmony with nature. This master plan won both the Award for Excellence 2005, given by the Congress for New Urbanism (USA) and the American Society of Landscape Architects Award—2005. The concept of a hill town (or hill station) dates from British colonial times and describes locations where British administrators fl ed to escape the worst tropical humidity and heat.

Lavasa will consist of diverse neighborhoods, focusing on upper middle class to affl uent families. It will include business parks made up of employers, such as commercial, institutional, and information technology (IT) fi rms, as well as nonpolluting processing fi rms. Modes of commuting will vary from personal cars to ferry transport to ropeway (i.e., skyway or ski lift-type) traffi c and, possibly, electric public buses.

Many corporate names are involved in the Lavasa Project, each with a stake in the synergies provided by the enterprise GIS. The architectural master plan is the work of HOK, USA. Accenture and ACNielsen conducted the project feasibility and research. Landor (Hong Kong) is handling branding and identity. Hindustan Construction Company—one of the largest private sector construction companies in India—is undertaking all construction activities. Hincon Techno Consultants is the primary engineering consultant.

Enterprise GIS and The developers of the Lavasa Project mandated high urban planning design standards with a Lavasa's IT Vision robust IT that is able to make the city of Lavasa uniquely digitally enabled. The city has invested in ESRI-based GIS technologies—ArcGIS Desktop (ArcView, ArcEditor, and ArcInfo), ArcIMS, ArcSDE, ArcReader, ArcGIS Publisher, and more. In addition, it is using customer relationship management (CRM) systems, document management systems, and enterprise resource planning. GIS is being used at the earliest possible stages of design, planning, and construction. These investments in IT have the goal of providing a highly effi cient city administration and e-governance for citizens. Lavasa's GIS will eventually be a central hub, providing information to municipal governance departments, citizens, prospects, service providers, and developers.

FEBRUARY 2007 20 ENTERPRISE GIS The geodatabase is on Microsoft SQL and is accessible via ArcSDE to Internet/intranet/LAN users. Web users can access ArcSDE data through a customized ArcIMS viewer. Editors access ArcSDE data either directly via ArcEditor or CAD clients. Off-site users can view the database through ArcReader.

Implementing GIS at RMSI Private Limited, Business Partner of NIIT-GIS Ltd., ESRI's distributor in India, commenced Lavasa work on Lavasa on December 6, 2004. RMSI's extensive experience in executing large GIS projects was a factor in its selection. The fi rst step was a detailed user needs assessment during which requirements were documented. During this fi rst phase of the project, RMSI—in consultation with project personnel—prepared a detailed road map report for project management, presenting systems and functionalities for each department.

An artist's impression of Dasve, the fi rst town within Lavasa.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 21 WWW.ESRI.COM For status monitoring, the GIS allows users to link and view pictures, documents, etc., thereby allowing a more visual status description.

3D Visualization and Survey Data—Lavasa is located on undulating terrain. This requires that the enterprise GIS be 3D enabled. To provide good access to 3D data, users are being provided 3D model visualization data—created with the ArcGIS 3D Analyst extension (which includes the ArcGlobe application)—that is published using the ArcGIS Publisher extension on their desktops. In addition, this data gives a three-dimensional insight to key stakeholders when discussing matters related to terrain. From a marketing perspective, the terrain plays a vital role for customers weighing which plot to purchase. Since not all customers can necessarily come to the construction site, the 3D GIS offers an inexpensive but effective selling option.

Lavasa Project's Planning Department is using slope maps, aspect maps, and digital elevation models for business uses, ranging from estimating sellable area in a plot to landfi ll site identifi cation and security post location selection. The design team has used 3D visualization to analyze possible options of creating tunnel access along hills to shorten commute time to the city. Using the fi nished road levels, the GIS team did cut-fi ll analysis of road stretches. Such analysis results have increased confi dence and faith in GIS among traditional CAD users. Three-dimensional GIS was also used to identify suitable locations for cellular phone towers.

GIS Database Model—The GIS database model has been developed to capture multiple aspects of the city, from utilities to environment, tourism, and land title information. The data model development over the last year has aimed at capturing as much variety in spatial features as possible. In the current phase, the focus is on increasing quality and coverage of attribute information. The ArcFM data model from ESRI Business Partner Miner and Miner, a Telvent company (Fort Collins, Colorado), for water and sewer was also studied in detail to assess what further attributes need to be part of the existing GIS model so that a later data migration exercise to ArcFM can happen with relative ease.

Symbology and View Standardization—From the outset, the GIS team realized that engineering data needed to be presented in a visually appealing manner. Then all interfaces to data needed to present the same visualization of the data. This prompted the team to select ArcGIS Desktop as the de facto data visualization interface. For Internet services, the mapping service used an application as the front end that was built using ArcIMS and Macromedia Flash. For LAN usage, especially for presentations, ArcGIS Desktop was directly used to access a personal geodatabase that was synchronized with the central ArcSDE database. For off-site fi eld users, data was published from the same database using the ArcGIS Publisher extension.

FEBRUARY 2007 22 ENTERPRISE GIS Address and Asset Standardization—A new city development provides a unique opportunity to have the address database created for ideal GIS addressing standards. The building addressing standard implemented at Lavasa was developed by studying U.S. addressing standards, then customized according to Indian realities. A good addressing standard facilitates usage of industry-standard geocoding engines that, in turn, will help in the development of proper disaster management, utilities operation, and maintenance systems.

Environment, CRM, and Sales Monitoring Systems—The Lavasa Project has been designed in harmony with the area's rich natural beauty. One of the objectives of the GIS portion of the project is to integrate environment pollution monitoring with the enterprise GIS. Lavasa also has a CRM solution for sales management as part of its IT plan. Since "land" is the "product" of this CRM, GIS fi ts in as the natural technology to use in site location. Presently, the GIS team actively helps Sales Department staff monitor plot sales and decide on and mark out premium plots and enables them to help customers select their plots.

Metadata Management—With more than 125 feature classes in the ArcSDE database, rapidly changing data, and multiple sources of input data, metadata management and update are key activities. The GIS team is using the ArcGIS metadata update system to keep the metadata up to date. A periodic backup of metadata is performed to ensure that these critical details are preserved.

The Road Ahead Incorporating state-of-the-art technology, such as enterprise GIS, into a large project is inevitably challenging. As proven again at Lavasa, ironically the largest challenges are rarely technical in nature. Instead, primary challenges tend to involve gaining support/acceptance from users coming from different domains. However, once users are able to see direct advantages fi ltering in by virtue of their work getting easier, more effi cient, and more synergistic, these users will start embracing spatial technologies.

The various stakeholders of Lavasa can now clearly visualize what an enterprise GIS is capable of delivering. While there is still work to be done on the road to a fully articulated enterprise GIS implementation, the building blocks being placed "brick by brick" today will ensure that the vision of the GIS team will be met tomorrow.

(Reprinted from the Summer 2006 issue of ArcNews magazine)

GIS BEST PRACTICES 23 WWW.ESRI.COM Somerset County, New Jersey, Developing a County Enterprise GIS

Somerset County is a suburban county of nearly 300,000 residents located in central New Jersey. The roots of its GIS lie within its health and planning divisions. These are common starting points for local government GIS. The county conducted a more expansive evaluation of GIS technology in its 1999 needs assessment, identifying how the technology could be used to support a wide range of county operations. The needs assessment report, prepared by the consulting, engineering, construction, and operations fi rm and ESRI Business Partner Camp Dresser & McKee (CDM), was intended to educate county decision makers about the costs and benefi ts of implementing GIS as well as serve as a springboard for integration of this technology into county business processes.

A pilot project providing Web access to county data allows emergency responders and residents to be better prepared for response.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 25 WWW.ESRI.COM Using recommendations made by the report, the county began taking the necessary steps the following year to develop its GIS. "Somerset County has long been considered one of the leading counties in the state in technology," says Peter Palmer, county freeholder. "We decided that we wanted to start using GIS but take a different approach to implementation by supporting our various divisions rather than creating a large support staff in our Management Information Services Division."

Following a commitment to allocate $1.5 million over the next fi ve years, in 2002 the county tapped into its existing staff to select its fi rst full-time GIS coordinator. Jim Girvan, a principal planner with the Planning Division, had been working with ArcView for approximately three years using natural resource, land-use, utility, and census data to support planning activities. His familiarity with the technology and 15 years with the county made him a logical choice to guide the effort.

"My professional background and training taught me the importance of having a sound plan in place before moving forward with a major project such as this," says Girvan. "Therefore, one of the fi rst things I did upon taking the position was to outline a fi ve-element GIS master plan."

The fi ve elements, or subplans, are the development, strategic, functional requirements analysis and database design, implementation, and organization and management plans.

The Design Process Somerset County had a well-established information technology infrastructure and had been using the ESRI suite of products to deliver and use geospatial data content for nearly 10 years. The system development would continue to be built around the existing infrastructure and look to take advantage of the new enterprise geodatabase architecture.

"We had migrated from a mainframe system to a wide area network of desktop PCs," states Bob Klingel, the county's director of Management Information Services. "We were confi dent that we could implement GIS without any signifi cant change in our current IT planning."

The county did take advantage, however, of the New Jersey Mapping Assistance Program that provided startup hardware and software to counties wanting to implement GIS technology. Provided with servers as well as ArcInfo, ArcSDE, and ArcIMS, the county was immediately able to distribute geospatial data to its users as well as create a mapping service Web site.

FEBRUARY 2007 26 ENTERPRISE GIS Having completed the GIS Strategic Plan in 2004, the county determined that it was time to move on to the next plan element, which would identify the functional needs and database design. "The Strategic Plan is our compass," explains Girvan. "It tells us where we need to go and guides us in getting there. We would use it to defi ne and build our system."

The organizational analysis of the county's operations resulted in an enterprise geodatabase that could effectively support a multiplicity of business processes.

Following a thorough request for proposal process, the county contracted with ESRI's Professional Services Division, as well as CDM, for the one-year project. Using a Web-based organization survey process recently developed by ESRI combined with CDM's knowledge of the county, the project team began an in-depth investigation of county business processes and user and data needs. More than 500 individual tasks performed by county employees were identifi ed in the surveys. The project team reviewed the tasks for software and geospatial data needs; then, using criteria established in the Strategic Plan, it grouped the tasks into 40 priority

GIS BEST PRACTICES 27 WWW.ESRI.COM business processes. The project team then conducted four weeks of interviews of more than 75 employees of the county's 28 divisions and 10 affi liated agencies.

The next phase of the project was to model the priority business processes. Led by CDM's project manager Peter Godfrey, the project team utilized the use case approach (i.e., modeling the proposed functionality of a new system) to defi ne each process, understand user needs, and determine functional requirements. Use cases, which are more often thought of in the context of software engineering, proved to be an invaluable tool to the project team. Users found the clear presentation provided by the use cases, which included Unifi ed Modeling Language diagrams, was easy to follow and make comments about. With the use cases and process models in hand, the project team conducted the fi nal two weeks of interviews to refi ne its work. The ESRI geodatabase design team became involved in the next stage.

Being involved from the beginning of the project, the design team had an excellent understanding of how the county conducted its business, the geospatial data needs of its users, and the functionality that would look to the data for its performance. The result was an enterprise geodatabase consisting of seven feature datasets; 79 feature classes with subtypes; and a host of domains, tables, and relationship classes.

Focus on the Future Girvan, who serves as the county government representative on the New Jersey Geospatial Forum, presented the enterprise geodatabase design and the Somerset County enterprise geodatabase data model at the September 2005 forum meeting. Having received the design with great interest, a number of public- and private-sector attendees in the state are now reviewing it and the process with which it was developed for possible implementation. Although New Jersey counties essentially perform the same business processes, Girvan noted in his presentation that individual counties may choose to do them differently or use different data. An example is the design's inclusion of the Land-Based Classifi cation Standards (LBCS) developed by the American Planning Association. Having spent 15 years with the county Planning Division, Girvan realized that a very detailed classifi cation system, such as LBCS, would be necessary to support one of the state's most active planning divisions. LBCS was easily adaptable to a GIS data structure and included a data model for GIS deployment. Its multidimensional classifi cation system characterizing land and structures allows the Planning Division to go far beyond the land-use/land-cover data available from the state.

(Reprinted from the Spring 2006 issue of ArcNews magazine)

FEBRUARY 2007 28 ENTERPRISE GIS West Springfi eld, Massachusetts, Builds Information Portals with GIS Employees and Citizens Both Benefi t from Effi cient Data Serving

The town of West Springfi eld is a small community located in western Massachusetts. Once a quiet agrarian community, it has seen major commercial development over the last few decades. Only 17 square miles in size with a population of 28,000, the town has a mixture of land uses—mostly residential with commercial development along the highways and in downtown regions. Like any other town, demand for its municipal services keeps growing as businesses expand and the population grows.

Screen shot of sales history, sale deed, plan, and other information for selected parcels.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 29 WWW.ESRI.COM Realizing the importance of digital and interactive mapping for tax assessment, public works, planning, emergency management, etc., the town developed a GIS in 1998 using aerial fl yovers, fi eld surveys, deeds research, etc. Since then, GIS has been playing an important role in meeting the ever-growing demand on municipal services.

Case in Point For example, in many instances, municipal and property data, though available in digital format, has nonetheless traditionally been spread among and maintained by multiple departments. This made it necessary to visit or call each department or use multiple applications to gather required data, which took time. Therefore, the answers to questions such as Who is the owner of a property? How is the property defi ned in the deed? Does a lot have any special permits? and Where are the closest fi re hydrants? required town employees to "run the gauntlet" to fi nd answers.

To solve this problem and bring information to the municipal employees quickly and effectively, an in-house GIS project was initiated so that staff members could spend more time on decision making and less time on searching. Since GIS can serve both spatial and nonspatial data, it was chosen as the medium to tie all databases and documents together.

Spatial data is stored in ESRI's personal geodatabase to take advantage of object-oriented functionalities and fl exible topology. ArcGIS Desktop (ArcView, ArcEditor, ArcInfo) applications were chosen as the development platform for easier customization and seamless integration with other databases, such as Oracle, MySQL, and Microsoft Access. The ArcGIS Desktop products have been customized to provide options such as searching for parcels, closest hydrants, plans, streets, and engineering drawings; viewing sale deeds and drawings; report generation; and creating mail-merged letters for notifi cation. These applications are provided by one platform called the West Springfi eld Municipal Information System (WSMIS). WSMIS consists of three major components:

„ Customized ArcGIS Desktop for municipal offi cials „ ArcIMS sites for public access „ MapObjects and ESRI MapControl software-based 911 emergency management system

The most frequently used application is a customized ArcGIS Desktop ArcMap application with ArcObjects, ActiveX Data Objects, and Visual Basic for Applications codes for seamless integration with other databases. The town's GIS is customized to retrieve updated information,

FEBRUARY 2007 30 ENTERPRISE GIS such as owner name and sales history, for any parcel directly from the tax database. It removes the need to create a temporary table to be joined to the parcel layer. Its support for one-to-many and many-to-many relationships solves, for example, condominium issues in which one parcel polygon is linked with many condominium units.

In the customized application, users can search and view sale deeds or lot plans, receive them from the Registry of Deeds Offi ce in digital format, and overlay parcels on lot plans instantly.

Information Improves Edward D. O'Brien, principal assessor, says, "Through the use of WSMIS, we have enhanced Effi ciency our ability to record real estate deeds from the Registry of Deeds and translate that data into an effective sales recording/valuation system. Assessors always had the data before, but it was not easily retrievable. WSMIS helps not only to retrieve it easily and effi ciently but also conveys it to other departments."

Knowing whether a parcel has any special permit or variance changes the planning process and is very important for the town planner. Realizing that, all special permits and variances are converted to digital format and stored in a free and open source database called MySQL. Parcel IDs are used to retrieve permits quickly from that database.

The town's building inspectors also use WSMIS to fi nd any building, gas, or plumbing permits issued to a parcel, in addition to other information, such as zoning regulations, photos, year building was built, and land use.

To explain how important WSMIS is, building inspector Tom Lagodich says, "We turn on WSMIS as the fi rst order of the day, as we deal with hundreds of requests for information. WSMIS has saved this department hours and hours of work by having information at our fi ngertips. In the past, we would have to go to numerous departments to gather information. The savings in man-hours—not only for the department but also for businesses, developers, builders, and residents of the town that we serve—are immeasurable. We often wonder how we got by before WSMIS."

The Department of Public Works, one of the biggest users of the town GIS, recently scanned all plans, fi eld cards, water tie cards, and other engineering drawings and is developing a document-searching application. ArcGIS Desktop has been modifi ed to search and view water tie cards by address and zoom to the parcel, which saves the department a considerable amount of time that would otherwise be spent sorting through piles of cards. Street data with

GIS BEST PRACTICES 31 WWW.ESRI.COM measurements is also linked with a pavement management system for the dynamic display of pavement condition.

The West Springfi eld Fire Department has been using GIS for emergency dispatches for several years. Applied Geographics, Inc., an ESRI Business Partner, developed an E911 Incident Map for the town using MapObjects, which is connected to the phone line. It automatically zooms to the incident location when a 911 call comes in and shows locations and distances to nearest fi re hydrants.

A Microsoft Access-based Fire Inspection Database, with embedded ESRI MapControl and a simple interface, lets fi re inspectors—without any GIS training or experience—easily add locations of shutoffs, hazardous materials, exit doors, etc., which was never possible before. It exports data to the E911 Incident Map directly so that fi refi ghters can view those locations on the computer instantly when a call comes in.

Fire lieutenant Steve Link says, "Utilizing the mapping system enables the fi refi ghters to quickly analyze the area before being dispatched. Being able to preview the location of these features on laptops, we can plan ahead how to approach the situation even while we are on the road."

Serving Data to the The town always wants to serve the community better. Disseminating public information over the Community Web means residents and businesses can get required information at their convenience. Two ArcIMS Web sites were developed to provide public access to tax- and survey-related information. To make the system less expensive yet more stable and robust, ArcIMS runs on an open source and free Apache Web server on Linux. Java, Java Database Connectivity (JDBC), and JavaServer Pages (JSP) technology are used for retrieving property information directly from an Oracle database. In addition to public use, ArcIMS sites can also be used by anyone in the town hall, saving the town money on licenses.

Kathy O'Brien-Moore, collector-treasurer, says, "Tax collections have been much less diffi cult as access to the deed is immediate. It has saved on trips to the Assessor's Offi ce and the Registry of Deeds."

(Reprinted from the Winter 2005/2006 issue of ArcNews magazine)

FEBRUARY 2007 32 ENTERPRISE GIS Aalborg, Denmark, Consolidates All Its Municipal Utility Companies Through GIS Mapping Progress in the Nation's Fourth Largest City

The screen shot shows part of an electric network and the effect of zooming in.

More than 650 years ago, King Valdemar of Denmark granted Aalborg, then a thriving coastal village on the Limfjord, a charter that regulated the relationship between the king and the municipality and empowered civic leaders to provide effi cient local government and services to its citizens.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 33 WWW.ESRI.COM Now the fourth largest city in Denmark, Aalborg is a model of responsible local government, as evidenced by its hosting of the Charter of European Cities & Towns Towards Sustainability Conference in 1994. There, the Aalborg Charter was ratifi ed, which encourages municipal governments to undertake environmentally sustainable programs for planning and development.

Additionally, Aalborg has implemented various GIS-based civic initiatives, including the Active Map of Aalborg and Digital Democracy in Rural Areas, to keep its citizens better informed and involved in the local decision making process by providing easier access to municipal information via the Internet.

One of Aalborg's many noteworthy endeavors is the consolidation of all municipal utility companies into a single agency responsible for gas, electric, district heating, water, wastewater, and waste disposal management. Since each of these utilities is similar in operation and responsibility, their unifi cation allows the elimination of various redundancies common to each agency, as well as the creation of unique cooperative benefi ts. For example, the heat produced by the incineration of materials from household and industry waste collection, combined with the surplus heat generated by industry, is used to supply large-scale district heating networks.

A key element of the amalgamated Aalborg utility agency is the centralization of all GIS efforts. GIS data and services are provided by a single department, which ensures that each utility is working from the same updated maps and data. This has further allowed the Aalborg municipality to streamline government and improve services by making critical information more readily available to the various city departments. The departments are connected to one another with a 1 GB network for high-speed communication.

In conjunction with the centralization of its public utilities, the municipality established a management team to develop long-term strategies to increase effi ciency through automation and restructured operating procedures. The management team identifi ed GIS as a strategic tool in its modernization efforts, and the technology is now promoted throughout the entire public utility organization.

The city began automating its utility database with the digitizing of its pipeline network in 1988. In 1996, following an intensive competitive evaluation, it licensed ArcInfo GIS software. Three years later, after the development of its extensive geodatabase, the GIS Department began creating utility specifi c data models.

FEBRUARY 2007 34 ENTERPRISE GIS The Aalborg GIS is extensive, containing almost 600 different feature classes within its geodatabase, which is updated on a daily basis. Some of the feature classes include data that comes from the integration with other systems, including supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA), customer billing systems, network modeling systems, cadastral data, aerial photography, technical basemaps, separate databases, and many others.

A screen shot showing a set of different utility lines. Included are district heating, power cables, water, and gas lines.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 35 WWW.ESRI.COM Evolving GIS Jens Henrik Sørensen, project manager of the Aalborg GIS Department, comments on the direction of the department as the Aalborg GIS continues to evolve. "Because of the strict requirements to integrate other systems and databases with our GIS, the complexity of our existing spatial databases, and the ongoing need to contain costs, our methodology is to implement a collection of standard data models for our GIS to increase the effi ciency and capabilities of our system."

The municipality began to construct functionally integrated and coherent data models to support the development of its spatial databases. The designs needed to be dynamic and compatible with existing data.

The initial model was for its gas utility and was developed with the help of ESRI Business Partner Miner & Miner (Fort Collins, Colorado), which specializes in the implementation of GIS utility applications. The model was implemented in 2000 and was followed by the development of a water distribution model that was completed in 2001 with the help of ESRI. Since then, the city's district heating and electricity models have also been completed. The municipality's wastewater, communications, and cadastral models are all currently under development.

Sørensen continues, "Developing our GIS with the use of data models has given us the opportunity to jump-start our projects. The models give us a high degree of fl exibility and more freedom in the comparison and analysis of our data. They are working particularly well for our municipality because we have centralized our databases, which allows us to provide the most current versions of the data to our users with the least amount of duplication."

The dynamic capabilities of the Aalborg GIS are already providing substantial benefi ts to the city. For example, today standard measurements indicating the location of district heating utility lines and fi ttings include Z values, which facilitate the calculations of pressure and temperature for network modeling. However, Aalborg's original district heating data did not include accurate Z values. The Aalborg GIS Department calculated this essential information by interpolating Z values from a laser-scanned digital terrain model and then subtracted the measured depth under terrain. The new Z value is written back to the database with supplemental information about the calculation method and the terrain model used.

Comments Sørensen, "Our network modeling system is able to perform a similar calculation, but doing the job directly in the GIS is far more effi cient and the result is documented in the correct manner."

FEBRUARY 2007 36 ENTERPRISE GIS An example of using the utility data with aerial photography.

Aalborg has also integrated its GIS with its fi nancial system, which provides the city with a spatially enabled assets management tool, allowing a complete overview of the municipality's assets from a geographic perspective. This includes detailing all in-ground infrastructure, such as pipelines and their age, condition, expected life span, and so on.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 37 WWW.ESRI.COM Sørensen continues, "Sometimes it is necessary to remove existing infrastructure, such as a pipeline, before its anticipated life span is over. Once it is removed, however, the pipe must be accounted for in our fi nancial system. For example, suppose an existing pipe is expected to last for 30 years, but because of urbanization, the city fi nds it necessary to remove the pipeline after just 10 years. In addition to physically removing the pipeline, it has to be removed from the fi nancial overview so that the municipality can maintain a very precise record of its physical assets. The assets are refl ected in the city's tax base and are essential in determining tax rates and projected city revenues."

The department's GIS software installation includes three licenses of ArcSDE (one each for production, for testing purposes, and to manage ArcIMS), Oracle for its database management system, ArcIMS for managing spatial data on the Internet, ArcFM from Miner & Miner for AM/FM applications, the ArcGIS Spatial Analyst extension, and ArcGIS Desktop—ArcInfo, ArcEditor, and ArcView.

Special applications for the ArcGIS suite include object seeking; GIS annual accounts; annotation, plot, map book (operational map applications), and conversion tools; edit tools, especially for the maintenance of the electricity data model; and integration with other platforms, such as the billing and SCADA systems. By integrating its GIS with these enterprise systems, the municipality of Aalborg has not only developed a highly intelligent database but also a network surveillance system that allows supervisors to continually monitor all transactions throughout their system and perform any necessary analysis and control procedures. For example, the real-time SCADA system can determine whether or not a leak it has recorded is critical and requires immediate attention. It then can display the information it has collected in a logical and organized fashion in the GIS so that remedial action can be performed, if necessary. In addition, the network calculation application can accurately predict the future of the network by projecting loads and potential switching using GIS applications.

In the Future In the near future, contractors will also make use of the GIS system. For example, a request to perform routine maintenance work on a pipeline will be submitted electronically to the municipality. There it will be recorded and analyzed by the system to determine the optimum time period to conduct the work with minimum disruption. Permission to perform the work will either be granted or denied online, which will greatly speed up the project approval process and minimize paperwork. In the event of a construction emergency, the GIS will generate mailing lists of affected residences for immediate notifi cation.

FEBRUARY 2007 38 ENTERPRISE GIS Other departments within the municipality, such as the fi re departments, use basemaps generated by the GIS Department for routing purposes, as well as determining the location of water lines. Aalborg's fi re departments plan to implement GIS in the future.

Looking forward, the Aalborg GIS Department plans to make greater use of mobile GIS systems with global positioning system capabilities, such as ArcPad. Employees in the fi eld can then have ready access to the municipality's geodatabase for reference and on-the-spot updating. Mobile GIS would also be available to departments requiring immediate locational information for providing emergency services.

Sørensen believes that the use of GIS will expand rapidly in Denmark, due in part to the national cadastre database the national government committed to building almost 15 years ago. The cadastre database is highly detailed, includes aerial photography of the entire country, and is available in multiple resolutions, providing the opportunity for a number of new GIS-based initiatives to be implemented.

Concludes Sørensen, "I believe that with the active support of our national government for spatial technology initiatives and the increasing opportunity for GIS education in our secondary schools and universities, the technology will continue to migrate from GIS applications to strategic problem solving systems that are spatially enabled."

(Reprinted from the Spring 2005 issue of ArcNews magazine)

GIS BEST PRACTICES 39 WWW.ESRI.COM Southern Company's Enterprise GIS Streamlines Communication Between Its Five Electric Utilities

This screen shot shows a sample of the Southern Company TransView Application in a zoomed-in view.

In four states of the southeastern United States, Southern Company has an enterprise GIS vision and a plan to bring that vision to reality. The enterprise approach to GIS enables Southern Company's fi ve operating electric companies—Alabama Power, Georgia Power, Gulf Power,

GIS BEST PRACTICES 41 WWW.ESRI.COM Mississippi Power, and Savannah Electric—to improve customer service, cost containment, and profi tability.

Georgia Power, the largest of the fi ve electric utilities, serves two million customers located in 153 of Georgia's 159 counties. Savannah Electric serves more than 300,000 people in a fi ve-county region of Georgia. Alabama Power, the second largest subsidiary, serves 1.3 million homes, businesses, and industries in the southern two-thirds of Alabama. Gulf Power serves northwest Florida, with approximately 400,000 retail customers in 71 towns and communities. Mississippi Power provides electricity to approximately 200,000 customers in 23 counties in southeast Mississippi.

Southern Company's TransView Application provides systemwide query and work design for all fi ve operating companies. This screen shot provides a full view of Southern's service territory.

FEBRUARY 2007 42 ENTERPRISE GIS Each of these fi ve utilities historically operated and maintained an independent GIS, with limited sharing of infrastructure and support. This resulted in duplication of efforts in maintaining, administering, and supporting GIS across the various business units (e.g., distribution, transmission, land, economic development, marketing). Substantial cost savings and knowledge-sharing opportunities had historically been missed, which directly impacted Southern Company's bottom line.

Recognizing the need to leverage common business requirements, centralize information technology architecture, and optimize GIS investments to meet the needs of the whole organization, Southern Company established an enterprise GIS (E-GIS) project in 2003.

"Southern Company invests a substantial amount of money in the continuing operation of existing GIS environments at its various operating companies," says David Breland, Southern Company's current E-GIS business analyst and GIS lead. "The aim of the E-GIS project has been to look at consolidating this investment to support a common architecture, structure, and pool operating costs, and better provide value to each operating company while improving the opportunities for further development and support of the business in the future."

Southern Company formed a GIS Core Strategy team, including management representatives from all the operating companies, which reported directly to the Southern Company IT Steering Committee. During 2003, the team developed a collaborative strategic E-GIS vision across companies and business units and fi nalized an enterprise site license for ESRI GIS software.

Southern Company then enlisted the services of ESRI Business Partner Enspiria Solutions, Inc., a consulting and systems integration fi rm based in Denver, Colorado, to defi ne the most effective and effi cient approach for implementing a company-wide GIS enterprise environment based on Enspiria's extensive experience with utility GIS implementations. Working closely with Southern Company's GIS Core Strategy team, Enspiria developed an E-GIS plan for the company, including

„ Enterprise application architecture with hardware, software, and network requirements

„ Implementation roadmap with cost and savings estimates

„ Framework for management and control of an enterprise-wide system utilized by fi ve separate operating companies

GIS BEST PRACTICES 43 WWW.ESRI.COM Aaron Patterson, Enspiria's E-GIS project manager, notes, "This project is a great example of a utility taking the necessary steps to plan its architecture and application deployments around real business needs and goals to ensure that maximum benefi ts are achieved."

Southern Company owns fi ve electric utilities in four states.

Southern Company's E-GIS solution consists of an ArcGIS platform based on ArcSDE with ArcObjects in addition to ESRI Business Partner Miner & Miner's ArcFM toolset. The architecture is a consolidated server environment using ArcGIS software—ArcInfo, ArcView, ArcIMS, and ArcSDE—as well as ArcFM.

E-GIS will be the central database for distribution, transmission, and land records across the enterprise. It also provides consistent, high-quality data to other systems. For example, it feeds data to the outage management systems in place at the operating companies to ensure optimum response to incidents, such as the recent hurricanes. And the ArcGIS platform serves as an enabling technology for addressing future Southern Company business needs.

A key planning consideration was the viability and timing of operating company participation in the E-GIS rollout, given that each company is at a different stage of its GIS program and

FEBRUARY 2007 44 ENTERPRISE GIS operates within unique business and regulatory environments. Alabama Power implemented a production ArcGIS system in 2004, providing a model site for E-GIS. Gulf Power, Mississippi Power, and Savannah Electric all expect to have migrated from their legacy systems to a production E-GIS environment during 2006. Georgia Power Company (GPC) contracted with Enspiria to perform a detailed analysis of the costs and benefi ts to migrate from its existing AutoCAD-based GIS to ArcGIS. GPC asked Enspiria to defi ne viable migration and implementation options, along with the costs and risks of each option, so that GPC could make the business decisions on how to best move forward. The result was the approval of the GPC GIS Implementation Project in June 2005.

Mary Adams, distribution support specialist at Georgia Power Company, explains, "We evaluated E-GIS from the standpoint of our current business needs and as the spatial foundation for future applications, including mobile, work management, and scheduling.

This high-level architecture diagram shows the consolidated server environment for Southern Company's Enterprise GIS solution, which consists of an ArcGIS platform based on ArcSDE.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 45 WWW.ESRI.COM The Southern Company GIS Core Strategy team presented its recommendations and associated implementation plan in early 2005. "The E-GIS plan has been approved by Southern Company executive management for implementation from late 2005 through 2007," says Danny Childs, Southern Company GIS business analyst. "We have made a commitment to increased effi ciency and associated cost savings through an integrated business and GIS technology environment."

Many enterprise applications leveraging ESRI technology are already under way and are paying dividends, including Southern Company's TransView application, which provides systemwide query and work design for all fi ve operating companies.

GIS Software in Use at Company/ Software Use/Function Southern’s Operating Business Unit Companies Alabama Power Company Distribution ArcIMS, ArcGIS, ArcFM, and Distribution data repository and mapping ArcSDE Transmission Shapefi les utilizing ArcIMS, Line data referencing using video of ArcView 3.2/8.3 (being fl y-by upgraded), and ArcInfo 8.3 Land and Real ArcSDE 8.3, ArcView 8.3, and Form basis of an application called Estate ArcIMS RouteMAP, which has been customized by the land department to support operational needs Land and Real ArcIMS Supports other general map services Estate and shares the landbase with other ArcIMS servers corporate-wide Georgia Power Company Distribution ArcGIS software's ArcMap For special projects/studies only but application plans to migrate all GIS-related activities to ArcGIS

FEBRUARY 2007 46 ENTERPRISE GIS Transmission Shapefi les leveraging ArcGIS 8, Planned for future support of ArcView 3.2/8.3, and ArcIMS transmission line design and maintenance programs Land ArcView 9 Laptop mobile viewing Land ArcView 8.3 Land parcel viewing Land ArcIMS Territorial data and Web services for external departments Economic Leverages ArcView, using Web application for economic Development the following proprietary development and marketing to applications in its daily businesses worldwide considering the business: ESRI Portfolio, ESRI state of Georgia as new offi ce/facility Business Analyst, and ESRI location Freeway Gulf Power Company Distribution ArcInfo/ArcSDE Currently in the development stages for using ArcInfo/ArcSDE as the basis for their GIS Mississippi Power Company Distribution ArcInfo/ArcSDE Currently in the development stages for using ArcInfo/ArcSDE as the basis for their GIS Savannah Electric Distribution ArcInfo/ArcSDE Land data sharing with the local government and for their distribution data mapping needs (Reprinted from the Winter 2005/2006 issue of ArcNews magazine)

GIS BEST PRACTICES 47 WWW.ESRI.COM Saudi Arabian Oil Company Explores the Advantages of Enterprise GIS Developing Innovative GIS Solutions for More Than a Decade

The Saudi Arabian Oil Company (Saudi Aramco) is the state-owned oil company of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. It ranks fi rst among oil companies worldwide in terms of crude oil production and exports and is among the leading producers of natural gas. Saudi Arabia is the holder of the world’s largest oil reserves—one-quarter—at more than 259 billion barrels. Saudi Aramco is a fully integrated oil company with operations in exploration, production, refi ning, marketing, and international shipping. In conjunction with its operations the company manages a colossal network of assets that includes wells, pipelines, plants and buildings, roads, utility networks, jet aircraft, and supertankers. Saudi Aramco also runs joint venture refi ning and sales operations in North America, Europe, and Asia.

Saudi Aramco manages a colossal network of assets that includes wells, pipelines, plants and buildings, roads, utility networks, jet aircraft, and supertankers.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 49 WWW.ESRI.COM More than 50,000 employees perform a spectrum of jobs ranging from exploration geologists and geophysicists to engineers, project managers, environmental scientists, and deep desert surveyors. All of these jobs rely on technical information that is geographically based. Virtually all of Saudi Aramco’s activities on land, air, and sea can be mapped to a physical location and analyzed in a GIS. Recognizing this, the Information Technology Division of Saudi Aramco has been developing innovative ESRI software-based GIS solutions for more than a decade. These systems support the company’s diverse mission and include

Surveying and Exploration—ArcGIS Desktop (ArcEditor) is used extensively to plan seismic surveying missions, monitor the performance of contractor crews, and analyze geophysical data collected during the surveys.

Engineering—A custom Mapping Wizard lets staff access a wealth of spatial data from the Oracle–ArcSDE repository and quickly create publication-quality maps, without needing to know anything about GIS technology or cartography. Customized ArcGIS applications are used to support well site planning, wellhead maintenance, and other engineering functions. ArcPad software-based solutions are also being developed to support fi eld-based navigation and data capture.

Logistics—The company’s existing telecommunications infrastructure is being leveraged to dispatch and track the movement of company cars, heavy trucks, and ocean-going supertankers. Knowing the precise location of vehicles and vessels is essential for the timely delivery of goods and services. It also provides a lifeline for staff driving in remote desert locations.

Planning—ArcEditor is used to digitize the location of all new facilities, and the resultant information is reviewed online by planners and engineers using dynamic ArcIMS maps. ArcIMS has been integrated with a Web-based document management system to enhance decision making and reduce the project review time frame.

Transportation—ArcGIS Desktop has been integrated with a third party road and pavement maintenance system, enabling transport engineers to visually assess road conditions over a large geographic area and forecast road works based on local traffi c volumes. Such spatial insights are impossible to gain without GIS.

FEBRUARY 2007 50 ENTERPRISE GIS An oil tanker. (Source: Saudi Aramco, Public Relations Department)

Utilities/Asset Management—Major projects are underway to convert the company’s power, wastewater, and telecommunication networks from a legacy AM/FM system to the third party solutions ArcFM and Network Engineer from ESRI Business Partners Miner & Miner (Fort Collins, Colorado) and Telcordia (Morristown, New Jersey), respectively. This utility data is crucial for planning engineering works and will form an important pillar within the enterprise GIS. Interdepartmental data sharing agreements are helping to maximize the value of the company’s spatial data holdings.

Safety and Emergency Response—Along with the vehicle and vessel tracking system, a Web-based gas leak emergency response system has been developed. This system reads live gas sensor readings and real-time weather information within the company’s plants and graphically overlays this with important GIS layers such as digital aerial photos, buildings, roads,

GIS BEST PRACTICES 51 WWW.ESRI.COM hospital locations, airports, and rescue facilities. Using dynamic maps, emergency responders gain a clear, shared picture of the emergency and its potential impact on people and facilities.

The emergency response system predicts the track of a gas leak.

Knowledge Sharing—An online mapping portal has been released on the company’s Intranet. Developed in Java, the ArcIMS site enables staff to easily locate company facilities, dynamically generate routes and driving instructions, and share annotated maps with colleagues via e-mail.

Land Management—Saudi Aramco relies heavily on GIS to manage land use permitting

FEBRUARY 2007 52 ENTERPRISE GIS processes, research land claims, and monitor illegal encroachment within the company’s thousands of square kilometers of concession area. The feasibility of using satellite imagery to automatically detect and map land use changes over time is currently being investigated.

Saudi Aramco hardware infrastructure is confi gured to be fault tolerant with a load balancing option enabled solely to ensure 24/7 availability with optimal performance of these mission critical applications. All corporate GIS data is stored in an Oracle9 database running ArcSDE 8.3 on a UNIX clustered server. ArcIMS is used to serve Web-based image maps across the company.

The foundation for a true enterprise GIS is now in place. Looking ahead, major GIS initiatives for 2004 include the ability to

„ Integrate GIS with the enterprise SAP repository for deeper analysis and improved management reporting.

GIS BEST PRACTICES 53 WWW.ESRI.COM „ Integrate GIS with the company’s SCADA systems to provide a real-time view of the company’s operations—from well site production to refi ning and sales.

„ Implement ArcPad and mobile GIS devices to gain effi ciencies in the fi eld and improve the GIS database.

„ Further consolidate and standardize the company’s spatial data assets.

„ Promote the benefi ts of GIS technology across the company.

(Reprinted from the Spring 2004 issue of ArcNews magazine)

FEBRUARY 2007 54 ENTERPRISE GIS Copyright © 2007 ESRI All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America.

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